TL74 THE DARK PAST OF THE 21-YEAR-OLD GERMAN GIRL CLAIMING TO BE MADELEINE MCCANN EXPOSED

THE DARK PAST OF THE 21-YEAR-OLD GERMAN GIRL CLAIMING TO BE MADELEINE MCCANN EXPOSED

While the world argues over biology, we went back to the source. We went back to the small, grey school in Poland where “Heidi W.” spent her teenage years.

We expected to find stories of a normal, shy girl. Instead, we found a horror story.

You must scroll to the very bottom of this report. The specific detail found in her discarded art notebook matches a piece of police evidence so perfectly, it is impossible to explain away.

THE GIRL WHO FLINCHED

“Heidi W.” (the 21-year-old claiming to be Madeleine McCann) was not a student. She was a haunting.

Classmates describe a figure who seemed to vibrate with a silent, screaming terror.

“We called her The Zombie,” reveals “Lukas M.,” 22, who sat behind her in History class for three years.

“She didn’t walk through the halls. She crept,” Lukas told The Crime Desk, his voice dropping to a whisper. “If you touched her shoulder by accident, she didn’t just jump. She convulsed.”

 

 

“She would sit in the back corner, rocking back and forth, staring at the wall. It wasn’t teenage angst. It was primal fear. Like she expected to be hit at any moment.”

Lukas claims that she never spoke. Not once. But her eyes were always darting to the door, checking the exits.

THE GEOGRAPHY LESSON MELTDOWN

But the silence broke one rainy Tuesday in 2011.

The class was studying European geography. The teacher pulled down a map of Southern Europe. He pointed to the Algarve region of Portugal.

“Heidi started making this noise,” Lukas recalls, shivering. “A high-pitched whining sound, like a wounded animal.”

“When the teacher said the word ‘Praia da Luz’, she snapped.”

Witnesses claim Heidi began scratching her own arms violently, drawing blood. She overturned her desk and ran out of the room, screaming a word that no one understood at the time.

“We thought she was crazy,” Lukas admits. “But now… I think she was remembering. She wasn’t seeing a map. She was seeing the scene of the crime.”